Showing posts with label school turn-around. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school turn-around. Show all posts

Saturday, November 9, 2024

Delegating Duties and Decisions in a Shared Leadership School

Avoiding Staff Reservations or Resentment

[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

 

Dear Colleagues,

Effective delegation is critical to administrators’ success. Delegating properly can empower staff and give them leadership experiences and decision-making control, allowing them to exhibit agency over important stakes. Yet, our research shows that, if not done effectively and at the right time, staff can view delegated decision-making as a burden that they would prefer to avoid. Knowing when, when not, and how to delegate helps administrators navigate this process effectively without paying an interpersonal price.

 

Hayley Blunden and Mary Steffel (with minor modifications)

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Introduction

   When implementing a building-wide academic or school discipline, classroom management, and student engagement initiative, it is essential to work from a systemic, ecological, whole-school-improvement perspective. This is because classrooms’ academic/instructional and classroom management/student engagement processes are interdependent.

   I have demonstrated this for over forty years in the field by asking educators three simple questions:

·       Do you have students in your classrooms who are behaviorally acting out because of academic struggles?

·       Do you have other students in your classrooms who are academically struggling because of social, emotional, or behavioral challenges?

·       When you have an academically struggling student or a behaviorally challenging student, which is which based on why are they having these difficulties?

   Consistently, the answer to the first two questions is, “Yes.”

   The answer to the third question. . . after some thought and reflection on the interdependence of students’ academic and behavioral classroom performance. . . is:

   “I don’t know. It could be an academic or social, emotional, behavioral problem. . . or both.”

   And that’s the point.

   Before schools implement school-wide academic initiatives, they must look at how their school’s current discipline, classroom management, and student engagement processes are impacting their students’ academic instruction, learning, and mastery. . . and how the new initiative might positively or adversely impact these same processes.

   Similarly, before schools implement school discipline, classroom management, and student engagement initiatives, they must evaluate the impact of their existing academic program. . . and how the new initiative might positively or adversely impact these same processes.

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   For me, the strategic planning for any school initiative. . . indeed, for all school improvement activities. . . involves a shared, collaborative leadership structure and process.

   And this shared leadership structure and process requires staff involvement, commitment, and productivity. . . and the delegation of certain duties and decisions by school administrators to school staff.

   And there’s the rub.

   How do administrators best delegate duties and decisions to school staff— to individuals, teams, grade levels, departments, committees, or everyone in the entire organization—so that they embrace them rather than (as in the quote above) “paying an interpersonal price” because they are seen as “burdens to avoid?”

   In this Blog, we will describe (a) the essential structure and process in a shared, collaborative leadership school; (b) recent research reported by Hayley Blunden and Mary Steffel on how to effectively delegate duties and decisions to staff members; and (c) how to apply the two together.

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Expanding on the Shared Leadership School

   As emphasized above, there are two essential elements in a successful Shared Leadership School: (a) a formal and well-organized shared leadership structure, and (b) differentiated decision-making processes.

   While virtually no administrator would question this, most districts and schools have a loose shared leadership structure (if they have one at all), and they use decision-making processes that vary—sometimes unpredictably—over time and across different situations.

   Critically, the shared leadership structure should incorporate the science-to-practice components that (a) facilitate sound strategic planning and school improvement at the student, teacher, and classroom levels; and (b) result in successful and effective school and schooling outcomes.

   The differentiated decision-making processes need to use research, experience, and common sense so that they can be implemented flexibly to adapt to specific student, staff, and school questions and needs.

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The Shared Leadership School Structure

   Based on long-standing science-to-practice studies, there are seven interdependent areas that help produce positive, sustained, and meaningful school and schooling outcomes (see Figure 1 below):

·       Area 1. Strategic Planning and Organizational Analysis and Development

·       Area 2. Multi-Tiered Problem-Solving and Systems of Support (MTSS)

·       Area 3. Professional Development, Supervision, Coaching, and Accountability       

·       Area 4. Academic Instruction, Assessment, Intervention, and Achievement (Positive Academic Supports and Services—PASS)

·       Area 5. Social, Emotional, and Behavioral Instruction, Assessment, Intervention, and Self-Management (Social-Emotional Learning/ Positive Behavioral Support System—SEL/PBSS)

·       Area 6. Parent and Community Involvement, Training, Support, and Outreach

·       Area 7. Data Management, Evaluation, and Efficacy


Figure 1.



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   In a Shared Leadership School, the first six of these respective areas are overseen by specific school-level committees or teams (see Table 1 below). The last area is an embedded responsibility for all of these committees or teams.

   (Critically, this shared leadership committee “blueprint” may be adapted given the size, needs, or challenges within a specific school. Moreover, we certainly recognize the presence and importance of other teams—for example, grade-level teams—that also exist in effective schools.)

Table 1.

   Briefly describing these committees or teams:

   Led by the School Principal, the School Leadership Team (SLT) is primarily responsible for overseeing activities related to the Strategic Planning and Organizational Analysis and Development component within the effective school and schooling model. Thus, it makes most of the site-based management and related organizational and fiscal decisions on behalf of the school, or recommends these to the administration. The SLT is ultimately responsible for planning (e.g., through the annual School Improvement Plan) and evaluating all school-level and student-specific outcomes.

   Because the core of the SLT involves the Chairs or Co-Chairs of the other school-level committee, they report on their respective committee meetings and activities so that all SLT members are duly briefed and can coordinate and collaborate, as appropriate, across school committees, teams, and staff. All of this facilitates a seamless “bottom-up” (i.e., from individual staff to grade levels to school-level committees to SLT and administration) communication process, as well as a “top-down” (i.e., from the administration on down) process.

   While the SLT is the oversight committee to which all other committees report, there still is a clear delineation between the mandated and district-designated responsibilities of the school’s administration and the shared leadership responsibilities of the SLT. In the former area, the SLT may be advisory to the school’s administration relative to certain administrative responsibilities, actions, and/or decisions where the administration must make final decisions. In the latter area, the SLT has many of its own decision-making responsibilities—still as agreed upon by the administration.

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   The MTSS—Multi-Tiered System of Supports Team is responsible for developing, implementing, and evaluating the continuum of services, supports, strategies, and interventions, and the data-based problem-solving process to address the academic and/or social, emotional, and behavioral needs of students who are not responding to effective general education instruction and classroom management.

   The MTSS team is composed of the strongest academic and behavioral intervention specialists in and available to the school, and it is also often responsible for determining a student’s eligibility for more intensive special education services if strategic interventions, over time and consistent with IDEA, are not successful. As such, this multidisciplinary Team is largely staffed by related service and specialization professionals—including special education teachers, the school nurse, the School Principal, and relevant others.

   Given all of this, this committee is largely responsible for the school and School Improvement Plan’s Problem Solving, Teaming, and Consultation Processes component and activities, but this committee’s activities clearly overlap with other committees, especially those focused on the school’s core academic instruction and social, emotional, and behavioral programming for all students.

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   The Professional Development/Teacher Support and Mentoring Committee oversees, facilitates, and evaluates the school’s professional development (PD), and formal and informal collegial supervision and support activities. These activities should help all staff feel professionally and personally connected to the school and its organizational, planning, instruction, and continuous improvement processes, and motivate them to interact instructionally and personally with students and each other at the highest levels of effectiveness.

   With goals and outcomes connected to the School Improvement Plan, this committee helps to evaluate the short- and long-term implementation and outcomes of the school’s PD program, making recommendations to ensure that all PD initiatives (a) are delivered using appropriate adult learning approaches; and (b) implemented so that staff receive the depth of training, job-embedded practice, supervision and feedback, and time needed to be successful. Ultimately, this committee facilitates a process such that the information and knowledge provided during any PD training transfers into instructional skill and confidence over time, and that the school’s PD program and process collectively results in meaningful student outcomes.

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   The Professional Development/Teacher Support and Mentoring Committee also helps welcome and orient staff who are new to the building each year, coordinates the teacher mentoring program for teachers who are new to the profession, and guides others who have completed this induction process and are moving toward earning tenure or continuing appointments. In addition, this committee stays abreast of new pedagogical or technological advances in the field, periodically briefing the faculty on these new approaches and how they can improve the school and schooling process.

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   The Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment Committee looks at the most effective ways to teach and infuse the primary academic areas of literacy, mathematics, written/oral expression, and science to all students in the school throughout the instructional process and day. Meeting on at least a monthly basis with goals and outcomes connected to the School Improvement Plan, this committee also oversees the implementation of new and other existing district- and building-level curricula into the classroom such that they are most effectively taught to all students.

   The membership of this committee includes representatives from every grade or instructional/ teaching team or level, including representatives from every intervention support or consultation group in the school and administrators. Many times, this Committee extends from the school-level up to the district level, and from the school-level down to the grade (or instructional team) level and individual teachers’ classrooms. As such, this “Committee” often is as differentiated as the curricula being taught in the school and, in large schools, it may have curriculum-specific subcommittees or other organizational arrangements, as needed, to facilitate the instruction and achievement of all students.

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   The School Climate and Student Discipline Committee is the building-level committee that oversees the school’s positive behavioral supports and interventions, school discipline, behavior management, and school safety processes and activities. Meeting on at least a monthly basis with goals and outcomes connected to the School Improvement Plan, this committee looks at the most effective ways to facilitate positive interpersonal, social problem solving, and conflict resolution skills and interactions across students and staff such that students feel connected to the school, engaged in classroom activities, and safe across the school’s common areas.

   This Committee also addresses large-scale issues of teasing, taunting, bullying, harassment, and physical aggression—working to prevent these situations across the student body, and responding to them with strategic or intensive interventions as needed. In addition, the Committee oversees crisis prevention for the school, and is prepared to intervene when crises occur. Finally, this Committee works to involve school support staff (e.g., custodians, cafeteria workers, secretaries, bus drivers) in its efforts, and it reaches out to parents and community agencies, and other community leaders in a collaborative effort to extend its activities to home and community.

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   The Parent Involvement/Community Outreach Committee is responsible for planning, implementing, and evaluating the school’s parent and community outreach goals and activities as written into the school’s annual School Improvement Plan. As such, based ongoing needs assessments of the school’s different parent and community groups and constituencies, and analyses of their resources, interest, and capacity, this committee focuses on (a) establishing and sustaining the collaborative approaches needed to address students’ academic and social, emotional, or behavioral needs in home or community settings, and (b) increasing the support, involvement, and leadership of parents, community agencies, and other organizations in accomplishing the school’s mission and goals. 

   Consisting of a representative cross-section of staff from within a school, this Committee collaborates with and supports its school’s PTA leaders and members. This Committee also collaborates with other community agencies and organizations, establishing partnerships with relevant businesses and foundations, and becoming, formally or informally, the public face and public relations unit for the school.

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Three Embedded Committee Structure Principles

   Critically, there are three embedded principles in establishing these teams or committees:

·       All instructional and support staff are on at least one school-level committee;

·       Every committee (except, perhaps, the Leadership Team) has representatives from every grade level (for elementary and middle schools) or departmental level (for some middle and all high schools); and

·       Every committee (except the Leadership Team) is co-chaired by instructional and/or support staff, and these co-chairs form the core of the Leadership Team (administrators are ex officio to all committees)

   This, once again, brings us back to the theme of this Blog. . . how to utilize these principles and establish these committees so that staff see them as advantageous—to themselves, their students, and the school’s culture and operation—and willingly participate and collaborate in the shared leadership process.

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   For those interested in a more detailed discussion in this specific area, we show how to implement a shared school leadership committee structure and process in our popular monograph:

Shared Leadership through School-Level Committees: Process, Preparation, and First-Year Action Plans

[CLICK HERE for More Information]

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   Moreover, we have discussed this committee blueprint in a previous Blog on staff development:

May 27, 2023

“Aligning the Seven Areas of Continuous School Improvement to Teacher Leadership and Advancement”

[CLICK HERE to Read this Blog]

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Differentiating School Decision-Making Processes

   In a Shared Leadership School, administrators differentiate among the common decisions that typically occur on a daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, and annual basis.

   They then (a) determine how these decisions will be made and by whom; (b) share and confirm this information with the School Leadership Team; and (c) discuss them with the entire staff—providing training in how effective committees and teams run, and how sound decisions are made. . . even when they are complex or controversial.

   Focusing on the “how and the who” above, below are some ways that decisions are made by small and large groups in a school.

   Critically, staff need to understand that the absence or abdication of making a needed decision is actually a decision to either maintain the status quo or to allow (or force) someone else to make the decision.

   While this should not pressure staff into premature or rash decisions, it also should not routinely occur because, for example, (a) staff are unable to effectively discuss—or want to avoid making—complex or controversial decisions; or (b) a small number of staff are overtly or covertly “threatening” to undermine a majority decision.

   Conversely, then, it is assumed that school and schooling decisions that are made will be supported and followed by all staff—even when they disagree with the decision, or it was not their first preference.

   This is not to suggest that decision-making is dictatorial. Indeed, staff have the right to “agree to disagree,” express and document their concerns and apprehensions, and—in some cases—ask administrators to revisit a decision. In the latter case, decisions that are illegal, unethical, potentially unprofessional, or contrary to the common (student) good should be revisited. (Note that we are not discussing personnel decisions here.)

   While the assumptions above are implicit and universal, they may still need to be discussed explicitly— in general or when specific decisions are “on the table”—by school groups, committees, or with the entire staff.

   Different decisions in a Shared Leadership School:

·       Command Decisions: Decisions that are made by school administrators, largely on their own or due to their authority or official roles or responsibilities in the school.

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·       Expert Decisions: Decisions that are approved by school administrators, but are made by (for example, educational, psychological, pedagogical, or legal) Experts who are working in the school or who have been consulted or researched by the administrators.

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·       Consultative Decisions: Decisions that are made by school administrators, after consulting with a within-school team, committee, grade level or department, or individual staff member—or someone outside the school. Administrators here can make their own decisions; they are not bound by the information provided during the consultation.

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·       Consensus Decisions: Decisions that are made by informally scanning or polling a group. . . where an apparent majority of the group agree with a specific direction or option. A consensus decision is as binding as one determined by a formal vote, and individuals should be allowed to request a formal vote and additional discussion if desired.

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·       Voting Decisions: These are decisions where a formal vote (e.g., by a show of hands or “secret” ballot) is taken on a decision or a “motion on the floor” (if, for example, the school uses Robert’s Rules of Order for decision-making).

Administrators, the School Leadership Team, or school staff may decide—in advance—that some decisions will require a simple majority (i.e., 51% of the vote) to “pass,” while other decisions will require a “super-majority” (i.e., 60% or 67% of the vote). In very rare cases, a unanimous (100%) vote standard may be used.

When multiple options (e.g., selecting one curriculum from five options) are being weighed at the same time, the “standard for winning” should be determined or agreed-upon in advance. This, for example, may involve (a) an absolute vote—where the option with the most votes (regardless of the number or percentage) “wins;” (b) a weighted vote—where the options are given points based on each staff member’s ranked preferences, and the most-preferred option wins; or (c) a “drop-out” vote—where there are a series of votes, and the option with the lowest score in each “round” is dropped-out. 

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·       Minority Decisions: This decision typically is not planned, and should be avoided. It occurs when one individual or a small (but, for example, vocal, powerful, or regarded) number of individuals vote counter to the majority, and/or voice a dissent after the votes and decision have been announced. At this point, in deference to these individuals, the rest of the group acquiesce to their dissent and vacate the vote.

If this “if I don’t get my way, I’ll take the ball and go home” tactic or strategy is allowed, then the “minority” could be empowered, and the integrity of a school’s decision-making process will be weakened or damaged.

The “antidote” here is to (a) reassert the expectation that the everyone will respect and support all final decisions; (b) review, in advance, the voting procedure—along with the standard of winning; and (c) ensure that the formal vote does not begin until sufficient discussion has occurred.

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   When schools effectively implement and consistently sustain these two essential Shared Leadership School components—a formal and well-organized shared leadership structure, and differentiated decision-making processes—they create a culture and mindset where staff recognize that their involvement in school committees and relevant school decisions is:

·       A relevant part of their professional role and responsibility; 

·       Beneficial to their professional and personal well-being and success; and

·       An important contribution to the success of the school and its student body.

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Research: How to Strategically Delegate Duties and Decision-Making

   Blunden and Steffel, in a September 10, 2024 Harvard Business Review article, completed a progressive series of controlled experiments and surveys with 2,478 participants from across the United States.

   They found that:

Delegating decision-making responsibilities, compared with asking employees for advice and maintaining decision-making responsibility, had significant interpersonal costs for delegators. But we also found material ways that managers can alter how and when they delegate decisions, so that employees feel empowered rather than burdened.

The results of the first set of these systematically-completed studies indicated:

·    Study 1. When recalling past incidents with their supervisors, staff who were delegated a task versus asked for their advice were less willing to help the same individual with a future decision–-regardless of the positive or negative outcome of the decision.

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·    Study 2. As part of a research study, when asked to decide between two administrative candidates during an on-line chat, staff were more likely to hire the individual who asked their advice during an interview challenge than the candidate delegated a choice to them.

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·       Study 3. As part of the next research study, when asked whether they wanted to continue working with their team leader during an online team chat, staff who had been delegated to during the chat were more likely to end their relationship with the leader when compared to staff whose leader asked for their advice.

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   Blunden and Steffel concluded:

It turns out that the people in our studies thought being asked to make a decision was less fair than being asked for advice, and that this sense of unfairness made them view delegators more negatively. It may seem unfair when someone asks a colleague to take on decision responsibility—and its potential burdens—when the colleague views that responsibility as rightfully the requester’s to shoulder.

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   Given these research outcomes, Blunden and Steffel next investigated the ways that supervisors or managers could delegate tasks or decisions without seeming unfair.

·    Study 4. In a controlled experiment, 578 participants were asked to imagine being asked by a supervisor either to make a decision or to give advice regarding laying off colleagues (a negative outcome) or awarding colleagues a bonus (a positive one). The participants were then asked to indicate how fair they felt the supervisor making the request was.


For those asked to make a layoff decision, Blunden and Steffel again found that participants whose supervisors delegated the decision to them (versus asking for their advice) were less willingness to provide help with future decisions. Yet, when asked to award colleagues’ bonuses, there was no difference in the willingness to help supervisors with future decisions between the participants delegated this decision versus simply asked for their advice.

 

In their follow-up analyses, the researchers found that participants told to make a positive outcome decision (i.e., awarding a bonus) felt that this was fairer than being told to make a negative outcome decision (i.e., laying someone off).

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·        Study 5. Critically, the results of next study demonstrated that supervisors were not rated down when they asked staff to make decisions that were relevant to them and that were consistent with their work roles and functions. In this situation, staff saw the delegation of the decision to them as “fair.”

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   Blunden and Steffel summarized all of their studies’ results:

When the decision outcome has a high potential to have negative consequences, is outside of the employee’s scope of responsibilities, and primarily affects others, there are likely to be interpersonal costs of decision delegation, and managers looking to utilize their employees’ knowledge should ask for advice instead. When these elements are reversed, transferring decision responsibility is likely to be less interpersonally costly and might provide employees a better venue to test out their decision-making skills.

Our work suggests that those seeking to delegate decisions may benefit from pursuing strategies that make their requests seem fairer. For example, delegators could consider framing a decision within the scope of their colleague’s responsibilities or could articulate how they will take active responsibility for any fallout from an employee’s choice.

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Implications for Administrators in a Shared Leadership School

   Adapting the research summary paragraph immediately above into “action steps,” administrators would be well-advised to delegate duties and decisions to their staff that:

·       Are consistent with their existing (or imminent) roles, responsibilities, and job descriptions;

·       Bring their knowledge, skills, and competence to the “next level” of excellence and efficacy;

·       Have a high potential to contribute to and positively extend their success and impact on students and other colleagues; 

·       Have a high potential to identify and eliminate existing ineffective strategies and/or time-consuming or counter-productive tasks; and 

·       Are fair and equitable with respect to what other staff/colleagues are being asked to contribute.

   All of these should be accomplished by asking staff to help build the school’s Shared Leadership system, by actively soliciting and judiciously using staff advice and recommendations, and by ensuring that new responsibilities are counter-balanced with the release of existing ones.

   Moreover, relative to any new duties or decision-making responsibilities, administrators should publicly commit to and consistently demonstrate that they “have their staff’s back.” While mis-steps or mistakes may occur as staff get used to new delegated roles or decision-making and leadership responsibilities, administrators need to focus on how to succeed “next time” through analysis, adjustment, advancement, and improvement.

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   As noted above, when schools effectively implement a well-organized shared leadership structure, and staff learn and apply sound and differentiated decision-making processes, staff embrace their new shared leadership roles and responsibilities because they enhance their professional and personal success, and that of their students, colleagues, and school.

   Indeed, through experience, they recognize that:

·       Schools and districts are stronger when experienced and talented people work together on shared short- and long-term goals, actions, activities, and accomplishments; and 

·       Having the responsibility to make some school and schooling decisions gives them an active voice in how the school is run, as well as what their future expectations, assignments, roles, and contributions might be.

   Ultimately, this is a win-win for both administrators and staff.

   When new roles and decision-making responsibilities are communicated and shared successfully by administrators, they have more resources and people contributing to all of the tasks that go into running a successful school.

   When administrators work as collaborative colleagues with staff, staff feel more trusted, involved, informed, and aware of the complexities of a school and the job of their administrators.

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Summary

   This Blog discussed the significant benefits of having a Shared Leadership structure and process in every school across the country. The structure was defined by the seven research-to-practice components evident in all successful schools. These were aligned to six school-level committees—each responsible for their part of the school success operation.

   The process was defined by describing the different ways to make school and schooling decisions. This is critical as successful Shared Leadership occurs when staff, who serve on committees, learn how to make decisions within those committees—and elsewhere in the school—on their own and on behalf of their colleagues.

   Knowing that some staff may initially be uncomfortable in a Shared Leadership School, we summarized the research in a recent Harvard Business Review article by Blunden and Steffel titled, “How to Delegate Decision-Making Strategically.”

   This culminated in recommendations on how school administrators can best delegate duties and decisions to school staff so that they embrace their shared leadership responsibilities—rather than seeing them as unwanted or burdensome, and their administrators as unfair or insensitive.

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   I hope that this Blog has either reinforced your current approaches to shared leadership in the settings where you work, or has opened a “new door” to you as to its benefits and features.

   As we near the mid-point of the school year, know that I continue to work on-site and virtually with schools and districts across the country—not just in strategic planning and the implementation of shared leadership approaches... but also in the areas of:

·       Enhancing school climate and student engagement;

·       Teaching students interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional awareness, control, communication, and coping skills;

·       Implementing effective Multi-Tiered Systems of Support (MTSS); and

·       Implementing effective Tier 2 and Tier 3 services, supports, and interventions for students with challenging behavior.

   If you and your team would like to discuss any of these areas with me, please feel free to e-mail or call me, and we can schedule a free first consultation session.

   I hope to hear from you soon.

Best,

Howie

 

[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

Saturday, September 23, 2023

Twelve Critical Components for (Continuous) School, Staff, and Student Improvement: Motivation Cannot Compensate for a System with Systemic Deficits

 [CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   While I love to celebrate the successes attained by the students, staff, and schools that I work with as a consultant, part of my job is to focus on the “half-empty” glasses, facilitating the processes needed to “fill them to the top.”

   And while it is important for districts and schools to celebrate successful strategic planning and professional development sessions (something that seems to be recently rampant on my LinkedIn feed), these celebrations seem somewhat hollow when many of our schools still:

·       Have large percentages of students not attaining academic proficiency, and not demonstrating (at least) grade-level skill mastery in reading, mathematics, science, and writing/language arts; 

·       Have large percentages of students not learning and mastering, and not demonstrating effective grade-level interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional awareness, control, communication, and healthy coping skills;

·       “Qualify” large numbers of non-disabled students as “students with disabilities” because (a) they have not provided sound academic and social-emotional skills instruction or remediation at the general education (Tier I) level, and (b) special education classrooms are the only places where strategic interventions are available;

·       Are not providing effective, equitable, and high quality educational services to students from poverty, whose first language is not English, who are homeless or have mental health issues, or who have significant out-of-school stresses or lived traumas; and

·       Are not aware of, or are unresponsive to, explicit or implicit biases that result in disproportionate educational opportunities and negative attention and discipline for students of color and with disabilities.

   I distinctly remember a consultation a few years ago with a district in Wisconsin. I had been virtually coaching a number of their district and school leaders on a monthly basis for over three years, and was asked to come on-site to conduct a special education/multi-tiered services needs assessment.

   Based on my knowledge (from the coaching) of some of the dysfunctional relationships and processes within the district, and having analyzed multiple years of district and school student and staff outcomes, the need assessment’s first on-site meeting was with the two Assistant Superintendents.

   Early in the session, it became apparent that they wanted only to discuss the “successes” within the district. When I identified “success gaps” and critical areas of needed improvement (one of the goals of a needs assessment), they reacted defensively and defiantly.

   After our meeting, they immediately went to the Superintendent who then met with me and, in essence, cancelled the remaining needs assessment activities as well as the contract.

   Clearly, the Superintendent was concerned more about the hurt feelings of her two colleagues than her (and their) accountability to all of the students in the district. . . especially those who were not being served effectively and equitably, and those who were disaffected, underachieving, or failing.

   [Parenthetically, based on the data and information collected, I still wrote and sent a Needs Assessment Report to the Superintendent and her staff, attempting to refocus their attention to all of their students and their accountability to them.]  

   I reminded them: If 67% of your students are academically achieving at the Proficiency level or better, then 33% of your students are not.

   It is fine to celebrate the glass being two-thirds full, but what is being done to fill up the entire glass?

   And what about the schools that need to fill up 85% or more of their glasses?

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A Tale of Two More School Improvement Districts

   Over the years, I have partnered with many districts and schools, helping them with comprehensive school improvement. I have worked with some of the highest functioning districts in the country—those that want to “keep their edge” in the face of an every-changing educational landscape—and with some of the lowest functioning districts.

   Indeed, when working at the Arkansas Department of Education for 13 years (during the No Child Left Behind years), my Project ACHIEVE school improvement model was the U.S. Department of Education-approved approach for every Focus School in the state.

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   When working with one school district for over five years, there was a “revolving door” of superintendents (and interims) brought in by a well-meaning but uninformed Board that did not understand what skills and experiences predicted the best candidate hire. In fact, at one point, they hired a superintendent with virtually no educational, administrative, or supervisory experience.

   It was not until they hired a superintendent who (a) understood curriculum, instruction, social-emotional learning, and multi-tiered services, and who (b) was not afraid of supervising, coaching, and holding district leaders, school principals, general and special education teachers, and related service professionals accountable to explicit, outcome-generating interactions that there appeared to be true “school improvement hope” for the district.

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   When working with another school district for over five years, we never got past the “good ole boy” culture that prevented the leadership from comprehensively and transparently analyzing every important component (see the Section below) of school improvement and success. This culture resulted in the district being designated a “School in Need of Improvement” by the state department of education.

   Even after the designation, the district’s Leadership/School Improvement Team stayed stuck in the belief that they simply needed to motivate their students and staff to “work harder and be more committed to achievement.”

   This was evident during “planning” conversations focused more on selecting the incentives and consequences needed to change people’s motivation, as opposed to conversations confronting the fact that students were not academically achieving because (a) of poor or inconsistent curriculum, instruction, social-emotional learning, and multi-tiered services; and (b) leaders who were not changing the culture by beginning the hard work of supervising, coaching, and holding their colleagues accountable to effective practice and student services and outcomes.

   But an embedded problem here was that, with all due respect, many of the district’s leaders did not know that they needed to analyze and change the two areas above.

   Instead, they truly believed that their district’s low-functioning school improvement status was because of unmotivated students and staff.

   [Figuratively, they thought their Basketball Team had the players with the needed skills and talent; they were just not effectively motivating these players.]

   Hence, the district’s leaders had school improvement skill deficits on top of their staffs’ curriculum and instruction skill deficits. These leaders did not know what to do to effectively improve their system. And they did not know that they did not know.

   At both levels then—relative to the students and staff, and the district’s leaders, an important school improvement principle was evident:

   You can’t motivate students, staff, or systems out of a Skill Deficit.

That is:

   You can’t change student outcomes or staff behavior using motivational approaches when the root cause of their gaps involve Skill Deficits. . . and

   You can’t change school improvement outcomes at the district leadership level using motivational approaches when the root cause of their gaps involve school improvement Skill Deficits.

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Twelve Evidence-based Components of Effective Schools: A School Improvement Template

   Relative to continuous school (and district) improvement, the same research-to-practice components are used for both high-functioning districts that want to extend their progress and “keep their edge,” and low-functioning districts that need to renew their progress and “get off of the edge.”

   Below are brief descriptions of the twelve evidence-based components of effective schools and how they achieve successful, continuous, and consistent school improvement.

   In the hands of experienced, data-driven school improvement experts (whether inside or outside of a school district), the current status, strengths, weaknesses, gaps, and needs related to the specific policies, practices, and procedures within these components must be analyzed. This should result in the design and implementation of a well-resourced and realistic action plan that is evaluated (and modified as needed) on an ongoing basis.

Component 1: Strategic Planning

   Effective schools are dedicated to continuous improvement across the entire school and schooling process. This is accomplished by focusing on all twelve of the components outlined here and how they work interdependently to maximize students’ academic and social, emotional, and behavioral outcomes.

   Periodically, schools need to complete (a) comprehensive status and needs assessments, (b) SWOT and gap analyses (of their organizational strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats), and (c) asset and resource evaluations so they can effectively leverage resources, maximize and build capacity, close gaps, and minimize the impact of conditions that cannot be changed.

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Component 2: Shared Leadership

   Effective schools have effective formal and informal administrative and staff educational leaders who lead with competence and by example.

   Effective schools also have shared leadership committees and/or teams that support school professional development, curriculum and instruction, classroom management, multi-tiered services, and parent and community outreach goals and activities. Every staff member is on at least one school-level committee, and each committee has representatives from every grade level (for elementary and middle schools) or instructional department (for high schools).

   In their respective focus areas, all committees and/or teams are ultimately focused on the successful attainment of all students’ multi-tiered academic and social, emotional, and behavioral goals.

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Component 3: Professional Development

   Staff in effective schools receive ongoing training, mentoring, coaching, evaluation, feedback, and supervision (when needed) in the development and implementation of all school and schooling processes.

   In each area of training, educators’ skill and implementation mastery is tracked in their:

·       Understanding and Mastery of Information, Content, and Knowledge; 

·       Ability to Implement and Adapt—with integrity—relevant Skills and Applications; and

·       Implementation Confidence and Competence on an ongoing basis leading to independence, autonomy, and expert status.

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Component 4: Data Management Systems

   Effective schools have a computer-assisted Student Information/Data Management System and ongoing data collection, analysis, and reporting processes to formatively and summatively evaluate progress toward explicit short- and long-term school, staff, parent, and student goals.

   This data management system should help staff monitor the academic and behavioral progress of all students. For students receiving strategic or intensive multi-tiered or special education services, it should be able to track the implementation and efficacy of all existing student intervention and intervention plans.

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Component 5: School Climate/Behavior Management

   Effective schools have a plan and implement a school-wide Social-Emotional Learning/Positive Behavioral Support System (SEL/PBSS) that facilitates school safety and positive classroom climates through students’ (and staff’s) use of interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional awareness, control, communication, and coping skills. Embedded in this are the cultural competence skills that address racism and implicit or unconscious bias.

   This SEL/PBSS system is embedded in a multi-tiered system of services, supports, strategies, and interventions that range from prevention to strategic intervention to crisis management and intensive approaches. The latter approaches are especially important for students with persistent and/or significant social, emotional, and behavioral challenges.

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Component 6: Academic/SEL Curriculum & Assessment

   Effective schools have publicly accessible documents that outline the scope-and-sequence of all academic and social-emotional goals and objectives—from preschool through high school—that guide lesson development, instruction, evaluation, and outcomes at every grade level in the school.

   These scope and sequence documents are cross-walked and are consistent with state standards and benchmarks, and they are used as formative and summative evaluation guides to track, as above, student learning, progress, and mastery.

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Component 7: Academic Instruction and Engagement

   Staff in effective schools receive ongoing training and supervision—and  have guided discussions with follow-up—in effective classroom organization, behavior management, academic student grouping, and other approaches that maximize students' time on task, academic and instructional engagement, and effective use of allocated academic/behavioral learning time.

   Staff use effective and flexible instructional group patterns and configurations with their students to differentiate instruction, maximize learning outcomes, and create and maintain positive, safe, and cooperative learning environments.

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Component 8: Multi-Tiered Systems of Support

   Effective  schools  have  a  written  document  that  outlines  the  process, components, and elements of their multi-tiered system of supports.

  This document guides professional development and implementation relative to how:

·       General education teachers monitor students’ academic and behavioral progress, determine the need for, and provide early intervention support for students not making academic or behavioral progress;

·       Data-based diagnostic or functional assessments are conducted by related services and other staff to determine the root causes of students’ persistent or significant academic struggles or social, emotional, or behavioral challenges; and

·       Assessment  results  are  linked  to  appropriate  multi-tiered services,  supports, strategies, or interventions, and how these are evaluated.

   Effective multi-tiered systems of support focus predominantly on the intensity, integrity, and efficacy of services and supports that students need and receive.

   Involved here are:

·       Grade, department, and building-level teams that provide prereferral and post-assessment interventions for students not making sufficient academic and/or social, emotional, or behavioral progress.

·       Related service professionals (e.g., school psychologists, counselors, social workers, and others) who work with or are on these teams, providing consultation and intervention support to general and special education teachers along the school’s multi-tiered continuum.

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Component 9: Data-based Problem-Solving

   When students demonstrate persistent or significant academic or social, emotional, or behavioral challenges, a data-based problem-solving process is used to:

·       Identify, clarify, and contextualize the problem;

·       Functionally analyze the problem to determine its root causes;

·       Link  the  root  cause  analysis  results  to  strategic  or  intensive services, supports, strategies, or interventions; and

·       Evaluate the integrity of the interventions, and the short- and long- term student-focused results.

   In effective schools, instructional, specialized support (school psychologists, counselors, social workers, special educators, intervention personnel, etc.), and administrative staff receive ongoing training, evaluation, feedback, and supervision (when needed) in data-based problem-solving processes.

   This training includes the collection and analysis of student information and data, profession-specific skills in different interventions areas, and the ability to integrate effective consultation processes into the data-based problem-solving process.

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Component 10: Academic & SEL/PBSS Interventions

   Staff in effective schools have the skills to provide (a) effective differentiated academic and social skills instruction for all students; and (b) the multi-tiered services, supports, strategies, or interventions for students who are academically struggling and/or exhibiting behavioral challenges.

   This occurs by teachers in the classroom, and (as needed) in small groups or with individual students by specialized staff or multi-disciplinary service providers. These processes are led by school administrators, and coordinated by the members of a school-level Multi-Tiered Services and Supports Team.

   In the classroom, assistive supports, remediation, accommodations, and modification strategies, respectively, are available to academically struggling or behaviorally challenging students.

   At the small group and individual student levels, research-based strategic or intensive academic, and social, emotional, or behavioral interventions are available in effective schools. These may or may not be connected to 504 or Individualized Education Plans.

   When interventions (or the expertise to implement them) are not available, effective schools utilize outside district, community-based, or other (e.g., virtual) off-site consultants.

   In the physical, occupational, speech and language, social, emotional, or behavioral areas, interventions may involve district professionals or private practitioners who become part of the school’s multi-tiered intervention team for specific student cases.

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Component 11: Year-to-Year Articulation

   Effective schools have an organized, formal, and ongoing process to articulate (or transition) students, academically and behaviorally, from grade to grade and teacher to teacher at the end of the year and during other school-year transitions.

   This articulation process includes effectively transitioning strategic and intensive supports and interventions that have been developed and implemented for students not making sufficient academic and/or social, emotional, or behavioral progress. It also includes transitioning the 504 and special education, vocational, and other services that selected students are receiving. Finally, it includes transitioning students to post-graduation (educational, training, workplace, or other) settings.

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Component 12: Parent/Community Outreach

   Effective schools have a written and systematically-implemented parent and community outreach and involvement program.

   The parent outreach program includes activities to encourage parent participation in school activities, parent involvement (at home) in their child or children’s education, and to help parents understand the school’s goals, objectives, programs, and desired student outcomes.

   The community outreach program includes collaboration with social service, mental health, law enforcement, and other relevant agencies, encouraging their direct and indirect support of and participation in relevant school and schooling goals, objectives, and activities.

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Summary

   Whether you are in a high-functioning district, school, or educational agency or setting that wants to extend its progress and success, or in a less effectively-functioning setting that needs to embark on a conscious and concerted improvement effort, the research-to-practice components are essentially the same—albeit with some setting-specific modifications or adaptations.

   This Blog first briefly describes the school improvement experiences of three school districts at different points in the improvement process.

   It then describes the twelve evidence-based components of effective schools needed to guide any school improvement process.

·       Component 1: Strategic Planning

·       Component 2: Shared Leadership

·       Component 3: Professional Development

·       Component 4: Data Management Systems

·       Component 5: School Climate/Behavior Management

·       Component 6: Academic/SEL Curriculum & Assessment

·       Component 7: Academic Instruction and Engagement

·       Component 8: Multi-Tiered Systems of Support

·       Component 9: Data-based Problem-Solving

·       Component 10: Academic & SEL/PBSS Interventions

·       Component 11: Year-to-Year Articulation

·       Component 12: Parent/Community Outreach

   One pervasive theme is that school improvement involves a data-based, strategic planning approach that analyzes all of the components above. In most cases, improvement is not just about motivating school leaders and staff to do “more”—especially when they do not have the expertise and/or skills needed to complete the strategic planning process.

   In the end, data-driven school improvement experts (whether inside or outside of a district, school, or agency) analyze the current status, strengths, weaknesses, gaps, and needs related to the specific policies, practices, and procedures in the twelve component areas. This should result in the design and implementation of a well-resourced and realistic action plan that is evaluated (and modified as needed) on an ongoing basis.

   The “bottom line” is the academic and social, emotional, and behavioral learning, mastery, and proficiency of all students from preschool through high school. All improvement activities should be directly or indirectly connected to these outcomes. Anything different potentially diminishes or detracts from any and all school improvement efforts.

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   Thanks for reading this important Blog. I hope that our ideas encourage you to consider—especially at the beginning of this school year—one or more areas that you can target for improvement at the school, staff, school, and system levels. Schools only improve when we collectively make conscious, concerted, candid, consistent, and comprehensive efforts to extend our successes and address our weaknesses.

   As always, know that I am always available for a free one-hour consultation conference call to help you and your colleagues assess one or more of the twelve school improvement components above—translating the assessments into practical, day-to-day actions.

   Please feel free to reach out if you would like to take advantage—as many schools and districts have in the past—of this standing offer.

Best,

Howie

 

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